MARIETTA, Ga., November 20th, 2009 -- Demonstrating the increase in the C-130J build and delivery rate, Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] simultaneously delivered two C-130Js on Nov. 19 to two different customers &ndash; a C-130J to the U.S. Air Forces in Europe and a KC-130J to the U.S. Marine Corps.

The USAFE C-130J was accepted by Brig. Gen. Mark C. &ldquo;Marshal&rdquo; Dillon, commander of the 86th Airlift Wing, Ramstein Air Base, and commander, Kaiserslautern Military Community, Germany. The KC-130J Tanker was accepted by a Marine Corps flight crew and will be based at VMGR-152, Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, Okinawa, Japan.

&quot;Adding another C-130J is not a linear addition; it's geometric in terms of the capability of the airplane,&quot; Dillon said. &quot;One plus one doesn't always equal two, sometimes it equals three or four because of the great capability of the C-130J. After spending the last two weeks at Little Rock Air Force Base and seeing the tremendous capability of the C-130J, it's just going to add capability to Ramstein, Europe and that part of the world &ndash; which our country needs and our European partners need.&quot;

&quot;Delivery of two aircraft to two customers in one day is a clear indication of the accelerating pace of the C-130J program,&quot; said Ross Reynolds, Lockheed Martin vice-president, C-130 programs. &quot;The worldwide demand for this proven airlifter continues to grow and we are steadily increasing production to meet the demand.&quot;

The Ramstein delivery represents the eighth C-130J for the base, which will receive 10 C-130Js by the end of 2009. Four more will be delivered in 2010. The KC-130J is the 36th of 46 aircraft on order to be delivered to the USMC.